A new way to exchange energy among UK households

A new way to exchange energy among UK households
Around 3,000 households in the UK have signed up to a new peer-to-peer (P2P) energy exchange that will see them receive traceable renewable energy from local generators. Typically, UK households receive electricity from the National Grid, only around 40% of which is generated from renewable sources.
The initiative represents a pioneering collaboration between British companies Rebel Energy and UrbanChain aimed at allowing people to know where their energy is coming from. Rebel will supply the renewable energy and UrbanChain will run the P2P exchange.
The 3,000 homes on the P2P exchange are spread across the UK, spanning Scotland, Wales, Manchester, Birmingham, London and the south-west. They will be supplied with 100% traceable renewable energy from a combination of local solar, wind and hydropower assets.
With gas and electricity prices continuing to soar, the exchange’s founders believe its launch could represent a pivotal step in the UK’s energy transition.
“It truly is a first as green energy up until now has always been affected by ups and downs in the gas market,” says UrbanChain CEO Somayeh Taheri. “That is because renewables are intermittent and green energy is fed into the wholesale market before customers buy it back at much higher prices. This model has fundamentally remained the same [despite the changing energy mix] and has continued to see consumers hit with rising bills.
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